FlexN, also spelled as Flexing, is a style of street dance from Brooklyn, New York that is characterized by rhythmic contortionist perform shirtless and incorporate hat tricks in their performance for showmanship, as also used in turf dancing.
Before FlexN gained mainstream exposure, it started out at the home of a couple called Rocky and Sandra Cummings. [1] In 1992, the couple created a talent show and a local cable TV show in New York City, called 'Flex N Brooklyn'. [2] The dance roots are traced back to reggae, dancehall, and "...a chopped-up instrumental called the 'Volume' riddim". [3] The producers of the new genre refer to it as FDM, Flex Dance Music. [3] Unlike other street dance styles originating in the United States, FlexN did not come from hip-hop dance, funk music, or hip-hop culture. It evolved from a Jamaican style of street dance called bruk-up. [4] [5] [6] [7] In a 2009 interview with WireTap magazine, dancer Stefan "Mr. Wiggles" Clemente described bruk-up as a "reggae style of animation." [6]
FlexN is represented by 8 movement styles, with flexers often mixing the styles.
FlexN has been performed on the third season of America's Best Dance Crew (ABDC), on the second season of The LXD , and at the Guggenheim Museum as part of the YouTube Play event. In 2011, the Huffington Post published a brief news article on flex dancers Bones the Machine and DJ Aaron. [16] In 2013, NextLevelSquad performed FlexN at Breakin' Convention [17] and Adedamola "Ringmaster Nugget" Orisagbemi performed FlexN at the Vail International Dance Festival. [18]
The 2013 independent film Flex Is Kings documents the lives of several flexers over a two-year period leading up to a dance competition called BattleFest. [19] Flex Is Kings was screened at the Tribeca Film Festival. [7] FlexN was also the subject of a French online dance show called "Puma the Quest". [20] In 2014, The New Yorker published a seven-page article about flex dancer Saalim "Storyboard P" Muslim. [21]
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They let hundreds of people into their home,” says Gray. “Sandra used to cook for us, spaghetti and Kool-Aid. It’s always been a big circle of people coming together, making a change and doing something for the youth.
Living in Brooklyn and with my family being West Indian, I was into a lot of Dancehall Reggae music. I ended up being part of a show in Brooklyn called ‘Flex N Brooklyn’ that created another dance style we call Flexing, which evolved from a style called ‘The Bruk Up’ from Jamaica.
The biggest misconception is that flexing or our style came from hip hop, and it didn’t. It actually came from reggae. It came from ‘bruk up.’
It's based on a reggae style of animation," explains Steffan "Mr. Wiggles" Clemente, one of the event's judges. "People compared it to poppin', but it's a reggae style of poppin'.
Gray specializes in pausing, a style he created after losing a battle, coming home and throwing on a tape of himself dancing. “We will often record ourselves and watch it backwards, try to mimic that rewind style,” he says. “But I pressed pause and watched it move inch by inch. And I was like, ‘I want to dance like that.’”
This music video, by YAK Films for King Bones and DJ Aaron, shows two shirtless dancers/contortionists in gas masks intertwining with each other... it's a mesmerizing, and slightly unsettling, performance.